I disagree with having “Try Things” identified with one of these strategies. IMO it can be applied to (nearly?) any strategy. e.g., You can try different ways of doing low-key practice, or try different skills or subskills to practice. Or you can run experiments in internal alignment, like what happens if I let the part of me that has been saying “I want cake!” have complete control of what I eat for the next week?
Fair. The important bit is that Try Things *is* important enough to have separate from each of the other strategies – if you don’t remember to do it, you may end up in a rut with one particular strategy applied to one particular cluster of skills/ideas without noticing low hanging fruit in other areas.
I actually started by just calling it “Try Things” and then tried to make it a bit more concrete, and then most of the examples I could think of seemed to fit into the skill-oriented camp.
I disagree with having “Try Things” identified with one of these strategies. IMO it can be applied to (nearly?) any strategy. e.g., You can try different ways of doing low-key practice, or try different skills or subskills to practice. Or you can run experiments in internal alignment, like what happens if I let the part of me that has been saying “I want cake!” have complete control of what I eat for the next week?
Fair. The important bit is that Try Things *is* important enough to have separate from each of the other strategies – if you don’t remember to do it, you may end up in a rut with one particular strategy applied to one particular cluster of skills/ideas without noticing low hanging fruit in other areas.
I actually started by just calling it “Try Things” and then tried to make it a bit more concrete, and then most of the examples I could think of seemed to fit into the skill-oriented camp.